The knife-wielding Somali terrorist who stabbed three men, one fatally, on Melbourne’s Bourke Street was known to Australian counter-terror agencies and had links to north African extremist groups, it has been revealed.
Hassan Khalif Shire Ali, 30, crashed his car on the busy shopping street before setting it on fire, knifing bystanders and slashing at police officers who tried to stop him at around 4.20pm on Friday.
Officers eventually shot him in the chest, and he died of his wounds in Royal Melbourne Hospital.
It has also emerged Khalif’s passport was cancelled in 2015 after he was flagged as one of 300 potential security risks.
The Australian Federal Police (AFP) confirmed it was taken off him after it was decided by intelligence officers he planned to travel to Syria.
But the AFP spokesman said in a press conference late on Saturday morning while the target was on their radar, the decision was made not to intervene.
The knife-wielding Somali terrorist (left) Hassan Khalif, 30, who stabbed three men, one fatally, on Melbourne’s Bourke Street was known to Australian counter-terror agencies and had links to north African extremist groups, it has been revealed
He said: ‘While he held radical ideals, he didn’t hold a threat.
‘I want to provide assurances the full force of the Commonwealth is being given to the investigation (into the terrorist incident).’
The 30-year-old had a criminal history according to Victoria Police Chief Commissioner Graham Ashton – who announced on Saturday morning Khalif had a record of cannabis use, theft and driving offences.
Khalif’s 21-year-old brother, Ali Khalif Shire Ali (pictured), was arrested in November of 2017 in relation to an alleged foiled terror attack in Federation Square, also in the heart of Melbourne
La Trobe Liberal MP Jason Wood told The Age he believed better measures could be implemented to deal with known extremists.
Part of that remit could include a community protection intervention order – which would mean potentially banning certain people from
He said: ‘I’m not saying it’s going to prevent attacks but at the moment we’ve got no options.’
Khalif’s 21-year-old brother, Ali Khalif Shire Ali, was arrested in November of 2017 in relation to an alleged foiled terror attack in Federation Square, also in the heart of Melbourne.
Commissioner Ashton denied reports officers were unable to get in touch with Khalif’s wife, and said in the same announcement police had made contact with her and knew of her whereabouts.
Authorities may be hoping to utilise the state’s preventative detention laws for the first time since they came into effect, in which police are legally allowed to detain a suspect for up to seven days should they believe the person poses a threat or security risk.
As it was reported in the hours after the attack Khalif was known to the Australian National Security Agency, Twitter users reacted angrily to the idea he could have been stopped before committing Friday’s atrocity.
One user said: ‘Bourke Street attacker Mohamed (now known to be Hassan) Khalif was being watched by police and a potential risk.
‘Brother involved in planning Fed Square attack. What model citizens!
‘What did the authority’s think when he had multiple gas bottles in his Ute seens he was under watch? Going for a big BBQ!!!’
The lone wolf attacker also goes by the name of Hassan Shire, the Herald Sun reported.
Video showed a man wielding a knife attempt to stab and slash at two police officers before he was shot and fell to the ground, and also a brave shopper try to hit him with a trolley
La Trobe Liberal MP Jason Wood (pictured) said he believed better measures could be implemented to deal with known extremists following the attack
Twitter users reacted angrily to the idea Hassan Khalif could have been stopped before committing Friday’s atrocity on Bourke Street
Officers shot him in the chest after his Holden Rodeo loaded with gas cylinders hit a pedestrian as it mounted the kerb and exploded outside Target near the Swanson Street intersection about 4.20pm on Friday.
Video shot from the scene showed the frenzied attack that carried on for more than a minute, beginning with Khalif charging at two police officers, punching one through a vehicle window and lunging at them with a knife.
The Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) have since claimed the attack as their own via their propaganda platform, releasing a statement saying ‘the perpetrator of the operation in Melbourne was an Islamic State fighter and carried out the operation to target nationals of the coalition fighting IS’, Amaq reported, allegedly quoting a jihadist security source.
ISIS have previously claimed responsibility for attacks that were later discovered to be unrelated to the organisation.
The knifeman stabbed a shopper to death on Melbourne’s Bourke Street Mall and injured two others. A body was seen lying on the street covered in a white sheet
ISIS have since claimed the attack as their own via the propaganda platform, releasing a statement saying ‘the perpetrator of the operation… in Melbourne… was an Islamic State fighter and carried out the operation… to target nationals of the coalition’ fighting IS, Amaq reported
Premier Daniel Andrews said the attack was ‘an evil and terrifying thing that’s happened in our state’.
‘Our thoughts and prayers are with everybody touched by this, but we will not be defined by this,’ he said.
Victorian Liberal Party leader Matthew Guy said ‘we must eradicate this sort of thing,’ in a media conference shortly after.
‘Every resource should be going into keeping Victorians safe.’
Khalif chased the officers around a tree as they tried to avoid his blows and convince him to surrender.
A brave bystander tried to stop the attack by running him down with a shopping trolley.
Another bystander, who lunged at Khalif using a traffic cone, told the Daily Telegraph the offender had ‘crazy eyes’.
Another young witness, who was working at a local KFC at the time, recollected the moment he saw all the blood from one of the victims, who was face down on the footpath.
Markel Villasin, 22 and his bosses ran out of their store when they heard a ‘commotion’.
Mr Villasin said he saw the terrorist Hassan Khalif holding a knife and swinging it at police officers.
‘It looked like police officers didn’t know how to handle the situation because obviously in Melbourne it’s so rare,’ Mr Villasin told ABC.
Mr Villasin saw the man was breathing but appeared to be ‘bleeding out’, as emergency responders attempted to resuscitate him using CPR.
Despite the desperate attempts to save the man, he later died as a result of his wounds.
‘Unfortunately, the man passed away, they put a sheet on him. It was crazy because he was alive at my feet as they tried to work on him and then he passed away,’ Mr Villasin said.
Markel Villasin, 22, (pictured) was working at Bourke Street’s KFC restaurant near the scene when he heard a ‘commotion’
The officers then retreated to the other side of the road as the bearded attacker with a shaved head and dressed in a long brown tunic pursued them.
Horrified bystanders begged police to shoot him.
Khalif again attempted to stab and slash at the officers several times before one policeman unsuccessfully tried to taser him.
His partner then shot the assailant in the chest.
The knifeman clutched his chest and and fell to the ground where he was quickly arrested on the pavement by two plain clothing officers and rushed to hospital under police guard, where he later died on the operating table.
Khalif and his family were known to the Australian Secret Intelligence Organisation, the country’s domestic spy agency, after his younger brother was arrested for allegedly attempting a New Years Eve 2017 attack.
He was outed as an ‘ISIS sympathiser’ when it was alleged he planned to execute a major terrorist attack, before police say they intercepted his plans.
Ali was arrested and charged last November and had been the target of an undercover operation by the Australian Federal Police’ (AFP) Joint-Counter-Terrorism Team, Melbourne’s Supreme Court heard in June.
Federal agent Jonathan Bedford said officers had been monitoring Ali’s activities very closely and ‘sometimes daily’ in March-April last year, the court was told.
Ali will face a Supreme Court trial after pleading not guilty to the accusations.
Daily Mail is not suggesting Ali had any involvement in Friday’s Bourke Street attack.
His possible links to known terror plotters and extremist elements of the North African community in Australia are being investigated.
Khalif moved to Australia from Somalia in the 1990’s, Victoria Police commissioner Graham Ashton said, and had a record of ‘minor’ offences in relation to ‘cannabis use, theft and driving offences’.
‘He is known to police and is known mainly in respect to relatives he has that are certainly persons of interest.’
Victoria Police commissioner Graham Ashton and Premier Daniel Andrews spoke at a press conference after the attack
‘He is someone that is known to both Victoria police and at a federal level,’ Mr Ashton said.
Mr Ashton was asked about reports from eyewitnesses that Khalif screamed ‘Allahu Akbar’ as he chased pedestrians, to which he could not confirm.
‘There is no ongoing threat, but this is an ongoing investigation. It will be handled by the counter terrorism command and Victoria Police.’
Prime Minister Scott Morrison also released a statement condemning the actions of the assailant.
‘Australians will never be intimidated by these appalling attacks and we will continue to go about our lives and enjoy the freedoms that the terrorists detest,’ he wrote.
‘I praise the bravery of the police who were on the scene and took action and those who selflessly came to the assistance of the injured and provided comfort to the distressed.’
Opposition leader Bill Shorten also praised the bravery of ‘our extraordinary police officers who acted so swiftly and professionally in Melbourne’s CBD… and the passers-by whose first instinct was to go to the aid of others.’
A man caught a birds eye view of the explosion, recording the car bursting into flames from his bedroom window
Witnesses said the Holden Rodeo hit a pedestrian as it mounted the kerb and burst into flames outside Target near the Swanson Street intersection about 4.20pm on Friday, before the stabbing rampage began
The man was quickly arrested on the pavement by two officers in front of shocked pedestrians who stood back to film it
Victoria Police said officers responded to reports of a car fire before they were confronted by the man.
‘Officers were confronted by a male brandishing a knife and threatening them,’ Superintendent David Clayton said.
Counter Terrorism Command in conjunction with the Homicide Squad will investigate the incident but police do not perceive any ongoing threats at this stage and are not looking for anyone else in relation to the attack.
‘The exact circumstances are yet to be determined at this stage. The area has been cordoned off and the public are urged to avoid the area,’ they said earlier.
Khalif was taken to Royal Melbourne Hospital in a critical condition after he was shot in the chest, where he later died.
One of his victims had a head injury, and another an unknown injury. Witnesses said one of those injured was a security guard who tried to intervene.
One of the victims was identified as Tasmanian man Rodney Patterson, 58.
Mr Patterson and his wife Maree (not pictured) said the couple were ‘caught up in the attack’ before he was stabbed
His wife Maree took to social media to share the harrowing turn of events, detailing how she and her husband were ‘caught up in the attack’ before he was stabbed.
‘Rodney was hurt – good news is he is in a great hospital and doing ok given the circumstances,’ she posted on Facebook.
‘Can’t take calls at the moment but will speak to everyone when I can.
‘Thanks to everyone for their wishes and caring.’
Tasmanian MP Will Hodgman praised Mr Patterson’s ‘brave’ actions.
Rodney Patterson (second from left) was one of three people who were knifed by the Somali-born attacker, who was shot dead by police after crashing a car and setting it on fire
Another 26-year-old victim is yet to be identified.
A police officer sustained minor injuries but was treated at the scene.
Another man, in his 60’s, died of his injuries at Royal Melbourne Hospital.
‘People were trying to help victims because he was just knifing at random. The security (guard) from building next door was also stabbed, but I saw he was sitting up so we know he survived,’ a witness told the Herald Sun.
Two victims lie on the ground in pools of blood after being stabbed by the knifeman in the street, as bystanders rush to their aid
One witness said he was ‘terrified’ after seeing a body covered in a white sheet on the footpath
Victoria Police said officers responded to reports of a car fire (pictured) before they were confronted by the man
Witnesses said the car hit a pedestrian as it mounted the kerb outside Target near the Swanson Street intersection about 4.20pm on Friday
Witnesses described a chaotic scene with an injured pedestrian lying on the ground, and numerous police cars and helicopters flying overhead.
‘Police response was swift and overwhelming. I heard at least one gunshot initially,’ one said.
Another said they heard ‘what sounded like a bomb and gun shot’.
‘Roads are blocked and police advising to stay away from Bourke St. Feels like de ja vu,’ they said, referring to the car attack on Bourke Street Mall last year that killed six people.
Panicked pedestrians ran in all directions from the scene, some hiding in nearby cafes and shops, locking themselves in back rooms.
The area was locked down and the public shooed away while stores including Myer, Target, and David Jones evacuated and the bomb squad was called in to assess the car.
The burned-out car sitting where it crashed on to the pavement and exploded before the rampage began
The area was locked down with the public shooed away and stores including Myer, Target, and David Jones evacuated and the bomb squad called in to assess the car
Police are asking people to avoid the area and said more information would be given when it was available
Another said they heard ‘what sounded like a bomb and gun shot’
Authorities were on the scene in Melbourne attempting to get to the bottom of the attack
Warnings blared from the newly-installed terror warning loudspeakers for the first time, saying: ‘This is Victoria Police, please evacuate the area. This is Victoria Police, please evacuate the area.’
The fire was brought under control within about five minutes, a Metropolitan Fire Brigade spokeswoman said.
The fire brigade initially discovered ‘BBQ style gas cylinders’ inside the vehicle, but the bomb squad ‘rendered them useless’ shortly thereafter.
Police are asking people to avoid the area, saying the streets may be blocked off until as late as 8am Saturday morning.
Melbourne Lord Mayor Sally Capp praised emergency services for their efforts and the city for coming together to support each other.
‘Melburnians should be reassured by the rapid response from Victoria Police and emergency services who worked quickly, bravely and effectively to minimise harm to the public and contain the situation,’ she said.
‘I’m proud of the way our community responded respectfully to police instructions at the scene.
‘I know many of us will feel the impact of these terrible events and it’s important at these times that we pull together as a community and support one another.’
Security is expected to be at an all time high across the state following the incident.
Security around Melbourne will be at an all-time high this weekend as police take every precaution to keep the city safe in light of the violent terror attack on Friday
Mr Ashton said he has asked police to tighten up security at several major events over the weekend.
He said revellers at Stakes Day at Flemington Racecourse, soccer at AAMI Park and Remembrance Day on Sunday in particular should expect heightened security.
Mr Ashton said the decision to ramp up security was necessary following the terrifying ordeal that unfolded on Bourke St in the heart of Melbourne on Friday.
‘We are doing security reassessments of those events in light of what’s occurred here in Melbourne in the late afternoon,’ he said.
It comes as a trial continues into the horrifying rampage in Bourke St in January last year. James Gargasoulas is accused of deliberately crashing into pedestrians, killing six and injuring 27 others.
Police will investigate whether Friday’s attacker was a copycat to last year’s rampage.
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